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PLEASE HELP KEEP FEDERAL FUNDING FOR CATHOLIC CHARITIES CHEMUNG/SCHUYLER HOMELESS HOUSING STRONG – YOUR VOICE MATTERS!

Our agency’s federal homeless housing funding is in jeopardy – this funding is critical for keeping our homeless services alive.
Please help us speak up for federal HUD funding for our homeless housing programs….at RISK now! See the information below:
BACKGROUND:
Last week, HUD issued the application for the main source of federal homelessness funding (the FY2025 Continuum of Care (CofC) Program Notice of Funding Opportunity).     It was more than four months overdue—and it includes ideological and radical changes that will jeopardize this life-saving funding in communities nationwide and across New York State, including Chemung and Schuyler counties. For example:

  • Permanent Housing Cap: HUD intends to cap the total amount of funding that each CoC can use for permanent housing to only 30 percent of CoC funds. Currently, 87% of all CoC-funded projects are for permanent housing (Permanent Supportive Housing and Rapid Re-Housing). This change alone would result in the loss of permanent housing assistance for more than 170,000 people nationwide, including older adults, people with disabilities, veterans, and families with children. Nearly every CoC in the country will be negatively impacted by this change.
  • Organizations that previously used any preference to ensure protected classes have equal access to housing will have points deducted.    We anticipate this could impact many Catholic Charities programs, including Youth Homeless Demonstration Programs.
  • Delay and Gap in Funding: Because the recently released CoC Program Notice of Funding Opportunity was released so late in the year, and the applications are due in January 2026, some current programs will begin to run out of funds. It is very likely that HUD will not announce new awards much before June 2026, possibly later. This will leave any organizations with grants that expire during this timeframe at risk of not being able to pay rent, make payroll, or cover other operating expenses. In addition, given HUD’s plan to force communities to reallocate so much existing permanent housing funding to create new projects based on the administration’s new priorities, there will be even bigger gaps in resources because funds will not be available for those new grants until they are ready to begin operating, which could take 6 months or longer.

HUD’s changes will create chaos and destabilize our homeless programs and nationwide. Our most vulnerable neighbors, as well as program staff, community partnerships, local counties/City of Elmira, and landlords who rely on tenants’ rent, would all be collateral damage. Homeless persons could be forced back into encampments.

BUT IT IS NOT TOO LATE FOR CONGRESS TO ACT!

PLEASE CONTACT the Corning office of our U.S. House Representative, NICK LANGWORTHY (607-377-3130). Be sure to leave your name and county of residence. Your call will take a minute but can make a big difference. Or use this link from CCUSA: Action Center – Catholic Charities USA
Take Action Here as well: NAMI | Protect Permanent Supportive Housing for People with Mental Illness


Congress must stand up for families that participate in SNAP

Two-thirds of the money needed to partially fund another month is in SNAP’s contingency fund, which must be used when regular funding falls short. The contingency fund has $6 billion, which is still short of the $8 billion needed to fully fund SNAP recipients per month. The administration can use other measures to ensure families get full November benefits―and they must act ASAP to give states guidance and enough time to get families the help they need to put food on the table.

Send your letter today!


BRING IT HOME CAMPAIGN
The Bring It Home Campaign, led by ACL, is asking to send e-letters to Governor Hochul urging her to adequately fund mental health housing programs in her 2026/2027 Executive State Budget. Please take a moment to send an e-letter directly to Governor Hochul, urging her to include a 2.7% Targeted Inflationary Increase (TII) in this year’s Executive Budget. With rising costs and federal cuts, housing providers cannot maintain stable services without funding that keeps pace with inflation at a minimum. Anything less than 2.7% TII is a cut. This will undermine the ability of our programs that meet the needs of our community members living with serious mental illness.

To send an e-letter, please visit this link: Send E-Letters to Governor Hochul Urging Her to Support Funding of Mental Health Housing Programs in the 2026-2027 State Budget!

THE FUTURE OF HOMELESSNESS FUNDING IS AT STAKE

The National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH) and the Supportive Housing Network of NY (SHNNY) warn that homeless services are at a turning point. Recent actions by the Administration—including the President’s FY2026 Budget Request, new Executive Orders, and HUD’s re-issued CoC Builds funding notice—suggest that HUD may try to change how communities address homelessness. Launching a new funding competition now would cause serious delays, and the new requirements HUD is considering could add unnecessary burdens unrelated to homelessness, putting vital resources at risk.

Please sign on to this letter today!
https://endhomelessness.org/action/act-now-hold-hud-accountable-and-protect-coc-program-funding/


JOIN US IN SPEAKING UP FOR HEALTH INSURANCE FOR LOW INCOME NEW YORKERS

As a result of federal cuts in HR 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, up to 45,000 New Yorkers may lose health care coverage. Since 2015, New York State has operated its Essential Plan, which provided coverage for adults aged 19-64 with incomes up to 200% of the federal poverty level (FPL). Effective in 2024, the program was expanded to 250% of FPL to reach more New Yorkers, thanks to a Section 1332 State Innovation Waiver.

Under the waiver, 450,000 more individuals gained $0 premium coverage. In total, the Essential Plan provides coverage for 1.7 million adults who don’t qualify for Medicaid. All are state residents, lawfully present in the United States and ineligible for Medicaid or Child Health Plus or employer coverage.

Unfortunately, changes in premium tax credit eligibility for lawfully present immigrants in HR 1 will change, leading to a $7.5 billion funding cut, and a shift of $2.7 billion in costs shifted to NYS beginning in January. This will force NYS to discontinue the 1332 waiver and return to a Basic Health Program (1331), leading to a loss in coverage for 450,000 New Yorkers currently on the essential plan.

We are asking you to write to your member of Congress to ask them to delay the implementation of the cuts for three years to preserve health care coverage for these individuals. Both Republican and Democratic members support this delay, but they must hear from you to make it a priority.

ACTION NEEDED! Please call our U.S. House Representative, Nick Langworthy – 607-377-3130


PLEASE JOIN US IN SPEAKING UP FOR SNAP AND TEFAP

The Food Bank has informed us that The Trump Administration has eliminated the Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) funding. These funds allowed the Food Bank to offer a variety of food supplies that Catholic Charities of Chemung/Schuyler uses for meals at Elmira Community Kitchen and for groceries available at our Samaritan Center and Schuyler Outreach food pantries (and other area pantries). We are awaiting clarification of the specific food items impacted, but it could include eggs, cheese, chicken, milk, fruit, and more.

In addition to eliminating TEFAP funding, Congress is also gearing up to substantially cut SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps). In New York State, more than 800,000 children benefit from the food purchased by their families using SNAP dollars; 76% of the households assisted by SNAP include a worker earning a low wage, making them income-eligible; 49% of SNAP households are older adults. SNAP dollars stimulate the local economy (millions of SNAP dollars are spent each month across NYS – these stores hire local workers and pay local taxes). SNAP reduces food insecurity and benefits the local community! At a time when food prices are rising and new tariffs may make it harder for Americans to afford basic needs, any cut to SNAP could be devastating. Local governments and private charities are already stretched thin and cannot afford to pick up the tab for federal program cuts.

ACTION NEEDED! Please call our U.S. House Representative, Nick Langworthy – 607-377-3130

Our message:
Hello, my name is (NAME) and I’m a constituent from (TOWN/CITY).
I’m calling to ask Representative Langworthy to oppose any cuts to SNAP and to support restoration of the TEFAP program so that both can continue to serve the people of this Congressional District. SNAP helps more than 2 million New Yorkers and brings real dollars into our communities, supporting local grocers and businesses who hire local residents and contribute to local taxes. At a time when food prices are rising daily and new tariffs may make it harder for Americans to afford basic needs, any cut to SNAP and the elimination of TEFAP could be devastating. 

202503 SNAP


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Hold HUD Accountable to Protect CoC NOFO

The Administration is pushing an ideological agenda that could jeopardize communities’ access to life-saving resources. And despite the past commitments of a two-year funding application (NOFO) for FY2024 and FY2025, it seems that HUD still plans to run a new competition for FY 2025. Not only will a new NOFO at this point result in significant delays, but based on the recent criteria included in the re-issued CoC Builds NOFO, it could also include new onerous conditions that are unrelated to homeless services. These extra conditions could place these critical resources at risk in communities across the country – red, blue, and purple alike.

Such disruption would upend the very backbone of the nation’s homelessness response, destabilizing programs and displacing and putting the people they serve at risk. Program staff, community partnerships, and landlords who rely on tenants’ rent would all be collateral damage.

Urge your Members of Congress to ask Appropriations Committee leadership to adopt straightforward language in the upcoming continuing resolution, directing HUD to award homelessness grants based on the FY2024 grant results. This will ensure these critical funds are disbursed on time and prevent irreparable harm to homelessness response effort across the country.

ACTION NEEDED! Please call our U.S. House Representative, Nick Langworthy – 607-377-3130


Advocacy Needed: Fund Mental Health Housing Programs

As negotiations finally move forward, we are hearing that we must keep up the pressure if we are to get an adequate inflationary increase included in the final budget. We are urging our members to keep sending e-letters to members of the NYS Legislature & Governor Hochul, telling them to adequately fund mental health housing programs in the 2025/2026 State Budget!

The Governor included a 2.1% Inflationary Increase in her 2025-26 Budget Proposal. This amounts to a cut when compared to the amount the CPI (inflation) has increased during her time in office. The good news is that the Senate and Assembly BOTH included a 7.8% inflationary increase in their budget proposals. We need to keep pushing for the final budget agreement to include the full 7.8% Inflationary Increase!

Please take a moment to send Governor Hochul & NYS legislators an e-letter by using this link. Sending an e-letter is easy to do! Just use this link, enter your information, then hit send! A copy of your letter will then be sent directly to the Governor and legislators.


Advocacy Needed: 988 Saves Lives

Three years ago, the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline launched to connect people in emotional distress with trained crisis counselors – 24/7, free, and confidential. Since then, 988 has fielded about 16.5 million calls, texts, and chats from people needing urgent support.

But a crisis resource like 988 is only as strong as the resources we give to it. Congress must continue to invest in 988 to ensure it’s there when people need it most. That means more capacity at local crisis centers, more training for staff, and more availability of follow-up services that can save lives.

Take 2 minutes today to urge your members of Congress to support robust federal funding for 988.

988 Advocacy

988 Advocacy